Hi bro. How are you doing? I saw that you are interested about the history of Bobur. He was born in Uzbekistan. If you want to know more come here and enjoy our dishes also😊
There's no "trinitarianism" that didn't come from abrahamic tradition, so while you can yourself more monotheistic it's still abrahamic lore and faith, you still believe in angels, messengers, jinn, the virgin mary and absolute monogamy.
Riight.. Indo-European paganism just features "triads" instead: be it Dyauspitar-Indra-Prithivi (Indian) or Uranus-Cronus-Gaia / Cronus-Zeus-Rhea (Greek)-that is, father-in-the-sky, son-that-walks-the-earth, and the omnipresent-nurturer. It's no accident that the Christian trinity adopted this pattern-the Byzantines were culturally Greek. The trinity provided the perfect means of reconciliation between God-Angel "binitarianism" (Jewish) and Zeus-Logos / God-Word dualism (Greek). So while Trinitarianism _per se_ isn't found outside of Abrahamism, I wouldn't say that the idea is Abrahamic in origin..
Hi bro. How are you doing? I saw that you are interested about the history of Bobur. He was born in Uzbekistan. If you want to know more come here and enjoy our dishes also😊
Hi there. I’ve been to Tashkent and Samarkand. And chorsu is one of my favourite place and i have had the opportunity to eat somsa from djizzak.
There's no "trinitarianism" that didn't come from abrahamic tradition, so while you can yourself more monotheistic it's still abrahamic lore and faith, you still believe in angels, messengers, jinn, the virgin mary and absolute monogamy.
Riight.. Indo-European paganism just features "triads" instead: be it Dyauspitar-Indra-Prithivi (Indian) or Uranus-Cronus-Gaia / Cronus-Zeus-Rhea (Greek)-that is, father-in-the-sky, son-that-walks-the-earth, and the omnipresent-nurturer.
It's no accident that the Christian trinity adopted this pattern-the Byzantines were culturally Greek.
The trinity provided the perfect means of reconciliation between God-Angel "binitarianism" (Jewish) and Zeus-Logos / God-Word dualism (Greek).
So while Trinitarianism _per se_ isn't found outside of Abrahamism, I wouldn't say that the idea is Abrahamic in origin..